Submitted:
27 November 2025
Posted:
01 December 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Database Searches
2.2. Selection of Sources of Evidence
2.3. Data Items and Summary
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of the Sources of Evidence
3.2. Individual Sources of Evidence
3.3. Synthesis
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations
4.2. Suggested Research Directions
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Database | Search Parameters | # |
|---|---|---|
| CINAHL | Keywords: “burnout” AND “nutrition” AND “(“nutrition literacy” OR “food literacy”)”, “Find all my search terms”, “English Language”, “Peer Reviewed”, “Research Article”, “Start month: March Start year: 2020—End month: June End year: 2025” |
0 |
| OVID | Databases included: Embase Classic+Embase 1947 to 2025 June 02 APA PsycInfo 1806 to May 2025 Week 4 Ovid Healthstar 1966 to April 2025 AMED (Allied and Complementary Medicine) 1985 to April 2025 JBI EBP Database Current to May 28, 2025 Health and Psychosocial Instruments 1985 to May 2025 Journals@Ovid Full Text June 03, 2025 Ovid MEDLINE® ALL 1946 to June 02, 2025 Keywords: “burnout” AND “nutrition” AND “(“nutrition literacy” OR “food literacy”)”, “English Language”, “2020–2025” |
7 |
| PubMed | Keywords: “burnout” AND “nutrition” AND “(“nutrition literacy” OR “food literacy”)” | 2 |
| Scopus | Keywords: “burnout” AND “nutrition” AND “(“nutrition literacy” OR “food literacy”)” | 2 |
| Web of Science | Keywords: “burnout” AND “nutrition” AND “(“nutrition literacy” OR “food literacy”)”, “2020-01-01 to 2025-06-03” | 2 |
| Google Scholar | Keywords: “burnout” AND “nutrition” AND “(“nutrition literacy” OR “food literacy”)”, “2020 to 2025” | 230 |
| OVID | PubMed | Scopus | Web of Science | Google Scholar | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Keywords | 68 | ||||
| Duplicate Records | 3 | 2 | 1 | ||
| Not in English | 5 | ||||
| Not 2020-2025 | |||||
| Not a Research Study | 1 | 29 | |||
| Not Peer Reviewed | 2 | 67 | |||
| Published PreCOVID-19 | 1 | ||||
| Not Retrieved | 3 | ||||
| No Burnout | 1 | 29 | |||
| No Nutrition | 1 | 6 | |||
| No Literacy (Nutrition/Food) | 4 | ||||
| Irrelevant information | 12 | ||||
| Included | 1 | 7 | |||
| Total Results per Database | 7 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 230 |
| # | Title | Authors | Journal | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [47] | Exploring the role of dietitians in mental health services and the perceived barriers and enablers to service delivery: a cross-sectional study | Teasdale et al. | Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics |
2023 |
| [48] | Content validation of the teacher food and nutrition-related health and wellbeing questionnaire, a Delphi study | Jakstas et al. | BMC Public Health | 2025 |
| [49] | Burnout status among health and non-health sciences students during the COVID-19 pandemic: a nutritional perspective | Karaagac et al. | Revista de Nutrição | 2024 |
| [50] | Nutrition literacy: what are young adults with type-1 diabetes missing? | Abrams et al. | Cureus | 2023 |
| [51] | Fruit and vegetable intake, food security, barriers to healthy eating, and empowerment among dietetic interns and physician assistant interns: a cross-sectional pilot study | Campbell et al. | Nutrients | 2024 |
| [52] | Development of Master Chef: a curriculum to promote nutrition and mindful eating among college students | Parsons et al. | International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2024 |
| [53] | Survey of nutrition education among medical students | Duggan et al. | Journal of Wellness | 2023 |
| [54] | Treat yourself: food delivery apps and the interplay between justification for use and food well-being | Capito and Pergelova | The Journal of Consumer Affairs | 2023 |
| Study Aim | Participants | Study Date | Location | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [47] | Exploring the dietitian’s role in mental health services, as well as identifying barriers and enablers to service delivery |
48 respondents between 23–67 years | March to April 2022 | Australia |
| [48] | Evaluate the content validity of the Teacher Food and Nutrition-Related Health and Wellbeing Questionnaire (TFNQ) | 23 experts from six countries | 2022 | Australia, Canada, Switzerland, UK, NZ, and USA |
| [49] | Assessing the factors associated with burnout among university students studying online during the COVID-19 lockdown, with a focus on nutrition and lifestyle habits |
747 university students | October and November 2021 | Türkiye |
| [50] | Evaluating the nutrition literacy and perceived emotional burden of disease in young adults with type-1 diabetes | 42 young adults with type-1 diabetes |
January and February 2021 | USA |
| [51] | Comparing dietetic interns’ fruit and physician assistant interns’ fruit and vegetable intake, food security, barriers to healthy eating, and empowerment for making healthy dietary choices during an internship. | 81 dietetic interns, 79 physician assistant interns | January and February 2023 | USA |
| [52] | Reviewing the development of Master Chef, a mindful eating curriculum, and assessing its feasibility through an online expert review. | 16 experts of the 100 recruited | Spring 2023 | USA |
| [53] | Providing medical students’ perspectives on the degree and necessity of nutrition education during medical school. | 1182 medical students | January 2021 | USA |
| [54] | Examining the relationship between justification for use and well-being regarding mobile food delivery apps (FDAs) | 30 unique participants | June–November 2020 | Canada |
| Outcomes Regarding Aim | Study Type | Significance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| [47] | Dietitians, as members of collaborative mental healthcare teams, can improve the health and quality of life of individuals with mental illness. | Fixed response questions plus voluntary open-ended questions | Small sample size, results not generalizable |
| [48] | 10 out of 17 achieved consensus to approve item phrasing and scale style, selected scale suitability was assessed with 15 out of 17 achieving consensus, and questionnaire flow received 86% consensus | E-Delphi consensus vote | Not tested |
| [49] | Use of dietary supplements, dietary habits, and physical activity changes during the pandemic were more common in health sciences students than in other students | Cross-sectional web-based survey | Statistical |
| [50] | Young adults living with type-1 diabetes report higher HbA1c levels compared to other age groups | 40-question survey on Google Forms | Statistical |
| [51] | Dietetic interns had a higher vegetable intake than physician assistant interns, and physician assistant interns lacked nutrition-related knowledge | Cross-sectional pilot study | Statistical; however, small sample size. |
| [52] | Feedback was on the curriculum’s educational content, lesson objectives, and perceived feasibility, with most reviewers positively perceiving the overall curriculum | Qualitative and quantitative | Not tested, sample size too small |
| [53] | Most medical students in this multi-institutional study believe that their understanding of nutrition is vital to maximizing patient care | Observational cohort study | Statistical |
| [54] | Licensing effects of FDAs can have a positive or negative influence on consumers’ well-being, depending on consumers’ self-regulation, awareness, and conscious management of their food relationship |
Interpretivist qualitative | Not tested |
| Burnout | Nutrition | Nutrition Literacy, or Food Literacy |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| [47] | Formalized supervision arrangements enable better working practices, improve knowledge and skills, address issues objectively, and can minimize stress and burnout for dietitians, particularly those regularly encountering patients with high degrees of psychological distress | Barriers included a lack of awareness from others regarding the dietitian’s role in mental health, and a lack of specific tools for nutrition screening | With a higher prevalence of lifestyle diseases (e.g., diabetes, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease, and obesity) among individuals with mental illness, increasing nutrition literacy and the promotion of healthy behaviors, via group education or individual consultation, is essential to help improve physical health outcomes |
| [48] | While the Work-related Burnout construct achieved a consensus vote among experts through an identification of the rank questions for potential removal with Teacher Work-related Wellness, the decision was that it should remain based on emerging research showing associations between burnout and nutrition | That food consumption can influence well-being beyond just nutrition is an integrated approach that allows consideration and inclusion of the many determinants influencing healthy eating practices, as research evolves that evaluates potential relationships between diet quality, cooking confidence, and mental health outcomes | Some constructs applied to the TFNQ were sub-scales drawn from larger measurement tools, such as Food Skills Confidence, Cooking Attitudes, and Self-efficacy from within the cooking and food provisioning action scale, and the Resilience and Resistance Eating Practices from the self-perceived food literacy scale |
| [49] | Faculty, years of education, COVID-19-related thoughts, and precautions, paying attention to diet, and consuming milk, dairy products, meat, eggs, and legumes at least once a day were identified as factors influencing burnout in university students during the pandemic, demonstrating that adopting healthy eating habits was beneficial | Noteworthy correlation between being attentive to nutrition, dietary habits, and burnout in line with the existing literature— specifically, meat-egg and legumes consumption was associated with all sub-dimensions of burnout, and milk and dairy consumption were negatively related to emotional exhaustion and cynicism | The recommendation is to improve the health and nutrition literacy levels of not only health education students, but also non-health science university students |
| [50] | Significantly higher HbA1c levels of young adults living with type-1 diabetes compared to other age groups might be due to disease burnout rather than a lack of proper understanding of how nutrition can influence blood sugar |
Diabetes is a multidimensional component, and for the literature to reduce poor management to nutrition alone is counterproductive to patient outcomes | The findings indicate that the elevation of HbA1c levels in these ages might not necessarily be due to a lack of nutrition literacy but emotional burnout from the disease burden |
| [51] | Food insecurity is a concern for dietetic and physician assistant interns, where the ramifications of food insecurity could impact other goals related to healthcare professions, including the ability to prevent burnout and sustain a diverse pool of practitioners | Dietetic interns had higher vegetable intake than physician assistant interns, and a lack of nutrition-related knowledge for physician assistant interns may lead to both poor nutrition-related behaviors long term and a lack of ability to provide accurate nutrition-related education to the patients they serve | Physician assistant interns had a higher prevalence of food, housing, and transportation insecurity than dietetic interns, such that higher food literacy among physician assistant interns could play a role in helping them avoid food insecurity |
| [52] | Master Chef will be implemented as part of WellNurse: a Holistic Multidimensional Intervention, aiming to address systematic burnout and increase resilience among baccalaureate nursing students | This intervention is interdisciplinary, with initiatives in mindfulness, such as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, mindful physical activity, mindful eating, and nutrition education, alongside a system-wide promotion of a culture that exhibits resilience and community | Included in the curriculum are the promotion of culinary skill self-efficacy, nutrition literacy, body appreciation, and mindful eating, while also addressing potential limiting factors of the college environment itself |
| [53] | Medicine in Motion (MM) is a non-profit student-run Organization, founded in 2018, that aims to address burnout in medicine through physical activity, community service, and philanthropy |
Most medical students in this cohort believe that understanding nutrition is vital to maximizing patient care | Physicians who have undergone health literacy training regarding nutrition are more likely to implement strategies and materials that improve the health literacy of their patients |
| [54] | Once the individual becomes exhausted or reaches burnout, they seek comfort by making easy life choices. | While previous research has examined implications related to food labeling and nutrition policy, the need is to consider consumer choices regarding new technology options and their relationship to consumer well-being | Food well-being considers not only the aspect of eating food—it includes shopping for ingredients, preparation, cooking (knowledge/food literacy), sharing/social context, and the resulting emotions and mood all of which impact consumer well-being |
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